Linus Torvalds <torvalds@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > One is simple: > > git config alias.sync="pull --ff-only" Heh, I just wrote that myself after reading the early part of this message ;-) > which works fine, but forces submaintainers to be careful when doing > things like this, and using a special command to do back-merges. > And maybe that's the right thing to do? Back-merges *are* special, Yes. > after all. But the above alias is particularly fragile, in that > there's both "pull" and "merge" that people want to use this for, and > it doesn't really handle both. And --ff-only will obviously fail if > you actually have some work in your tree, and want to do a real merge, > so then you have to do that differently. So I'm mentioning this as a > better model than "git reset", but not really a *solution*. > That said, the fact that "--ff-only" errors out if you have local > development may actually be a big bonus - because you really shouldn't > do merges at all if you have local development, but syncing up to my > tree if you don't have it (and are going to start it) may be something > reasonable. Yes, that's the reasoning behind all the behaviours you described above. > Now, the other approach - and perhaps preferable, but requiring actual > changes to git itself - is to do the non-fast-forward merge *only* for > FETCH_HEAD, which already has magic semantics in other ways. So if > somebody does > > git fetch linus > git merge v3.8 > > to sync with me, they would *not* get a merge commit with a signature, > just a fast-forward. But if you do > > git pull linus v3.8 > > or a > > git fetch linus v3.8 > git merge FETCH_HEAD > > it would look like a "maintainer merge".... I am not sure I follow. Are you solving the real problem, the pointeless merge in the "security tree" that started this thread? I would imagine it was made by somebody thinking that pulling a tagged stable point from you is a good idea, like this: git pull linus v3.9-rc2 which under your FETCH_HEAD rule would look like a maintainer merge, no? An alternative may be to activate the magic "mergetag" thing only when you give "--no-ff" explicitly; otherwise merge would unwrap the tag, whether it comes from FETCH_HEAD. The following examples all assume that your HEAD is somewhere behind v3.9-rc2, perhaps done by git checkout -b test v3.8^0 Then under the "--no-ff activates the magic" rule: git merge v3.9-rc2 will fast-forward, but this git merge --no-ff v3.9-rc2 creates a real merge with the "mergetag" signature block. The one that caused trouble in the "security tree", i.e. git pull linus v3.9-rc2 or its equivalent git fetch linus v3.9-rc2 git merge FETCH_HEAD would still fast-forward under this rule. The maintainer needs to do git pull --no-ff git://git.kernel.org/... for-linus if the pull could fast-forward under this rule, though. Having thought this up to this point, I am not sure it generally is a good change. It feels that "pull --ff-only" that prevents people from creating pointless back-merges may still be a better mechanism. I dunno. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-next" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html